Nourishing Immigrant Families in San Rafael

November 7, 2024

Shortly after daybreak every Tuesday, Aurelia Vargas and a team of volunteers set up boxes of groceries on tables outside the Canal Alliance offices in San Rafael. The boxes are always full of fresh produce and other healthy foods supplied by the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank. On a recent morning, Aurelia, Coordinator of the Canal Alliance Food Pantry, pointed out in

Spanish, “It’s a combination of vegetables, fruits, grains, proteins. Today we have eggs… We have mangoes. My favorite fruit is mangoes.”

By 8:00 a.m., neighbors begin lining up to select groceries for their families. About 400 families depend on provisions from the pantry each week. “This is a great help for them.” Aurelia said. “The groceries in markets are too expensive.”

The pantry is a vital resource for Aurelia, too. “What I take from here helps me, for example, with my apartment bills, which are too high,” she explained. “For me, food means peace of mind, because I know that every day, I’m going to have something to give to my family.”

Every week, participants at Canal Alliance’s food pantry choose from a variety of produce, proteins like eggs, and pantry staples.

Breaking the Cycle of Poverty

Laura Jiménez-Diecks, Supervisor of Community Programs at Canal Alliance, smiles as she talks about the services her organization offers

The pantry’s neighborhood, the Canal area, is one of the most segregated in the Bay Area. More than 90 percent of residents are Latinx, and nearly half live below the federal poverty level—despite the neighborhood’s location in the largely white and affluent Marin County.

Laura Jiménez-Diecks, Supervisor of Community Programs at Canal Alliance, told us: “One of the main things we try to do is to help immigrants break the generational cycle of poverty. Everyone in this county deserves to achieve their dreams, regardless of immigration status, regardless of where you’re coming from.” Besides putting food on tables, the Canal Alliance helps its neighbors learn English, gain job skills, prepare for and complete college, access health resources and MediCal, and navigate immigration law.

It All Starts with Food

“The food pantry is the entry point for all services at Canal Alliance,” Laura said. People in line for the pantry, she explained, “come up to us and say, ‘There’s this paper that I received in the mail. I don’t understand it. Can you help me see what it says?’ Or ‘I just got a job offer, but I need to fill out this application.’ They know we’re here, and they know we’re accessible to them. And it all starts with food and the connection to it.”

The Canal Alliance Food Pantry is one of 250 neighborhood pantries in the Food Bank network, but the partnership between the two organizations goes beyond sharing food. For example, Canal Alliance coordinates with the Food Bank to help its neighbors apply for CalFresh benefits (food stamps) and to advocate for state and local policy changes that can help end poverty and hunger.

 

Creating a New Home

“Canal Alliance’s goal is to help everyone create a new home. And what better way to start building that than by having the sustainability of food at your table,” Laura said. “That’s where the partnership between the Food Bank and Canal Alliance is so important.”

She added: “People sometimes just think of food as this one thing they just pick up, wash and consume. But it’s much more than that. So much more than that…. Food is so central to connection and dialogue and offering love. Latinos do offer love through food.”

As the morning goes on, Canal Alliance’s food pantry bustles with activity.